FOOTNOTES:
"Was in der Zeiten Bildersaal
Jemals ist trefflich gewesen,
Das wird immer einer einmal
Wieder auffrischen und lesen."
[2] Three pieces for the piano, composed in 1829 for the album of three young English ladies; subsequently published as Opus 16.
[3] Felix Mendelssohn attended the Berlin University as a matriculated student for more than a year; a vast number of sheets written by him at this period, during the lectures, are still extant.
[4] A relation of the family.
[5] Mendelssohn's instructor in the theory of music.
[6] The name of the child.
[7] The violin player, Edward Ritz, an intimate friend of Mendelssohn's.
[8] Formerly a singer in the Royal Theatre at Berlin.
[9] Afterwards published under the name of "Overture to the Hebrides."
[10] A little sketch of the catafalque was enclosed in the letter.
[11] This piece appeared afterwards as Opus 39.
[12] Vernet lived in the Villa Medici.
[13] This picture is in the Borghese Gallery.
[14] On the 3rd of February, 1830, the bands of some regiments in Berlin gave Mendelssohn a serenade in honour of his birthday.
[15] The Prussian Consul-General Bartholdy, who died in Rome, and was an uncle of Felix Mendelssohn's.
[16] Some disturbances had in the meantime broken out in the Ecclesiastical States, at Bologna.
[17] The whole family had been in Switzerland in the year 1821.
[18] In the 'Titan' of Jean Paul.
[19] The overture to the "Midsummer Night's Dream" was composed by Mendelssohn as early as the year 1826.
[20] In the year 1821.
[21] In the "Liederheft," Opus 15 of his posthumous works.
[22] Ludwig Berger, Mendelssohn's instructor on the piano.
[23] Mendelssohn jokingly alludes to a poem of Bürger,—Der Abt von St. Gallen.
[24] Vide the letter from [Rome] of the 1st of February, 1831.
[25] Felix Mendelssohn, during his stay in Munich, received a commission from the director of the theatre, to write an opera for Munich.
[26] The lady who instructed Mendelssohn in the piano in Paris, when the family resided there for a time in 1816.
[27] Mendelssohn had been thrown out of a cabriolet in London in 1829, and his knee seriously injured.
[28] A "Kinder-Sinfonie," composed by Mendelssohn in the year 1829, for a Christmas family fête.
[29] A play upon Fanny Hensel's house, in a court—No. 3, Leipziger Strasse.
[30] At that time the residence of the St. Simoniens.
[31] The death of his friend Edward Ritz, the violin player.
[32] The cholera.
[33] Felix Mendelssohn had an attack of cholera during the last weeks of his stay in Paris.
[34] In reference to a situation in the Singacademie.
[35] He had received the news of Zelter's death.
THE END